The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia, FB in talks over sweeping news ban

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SYDNEY: Australia and Facebook held high-stakes talks yesterday after the social media giant sparked global outrage by blacking out news for its Australian users, as Canberra insisted it wouldn’t back down on a new law that would force the tech firm to pay for journalist­ic content.

From Thursday, Facebook has blanked out the pages of media outlets for Australian users and blocked them from sharing any news content, rather than submit to the proposed legislatio­n.

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg said he had spoken with Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg to find a way out of the showdown, and that negotiatio­ns would continue over the weekend.

“We talked through their remaining issues and agreed our respective teams would work through them immediatel­y,” Frydenberg said.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison also urged Facebook to “move quickly past” what he called threatenin­g behaviour and “come back to the table”.

He said his government’s world-first legislatio­n to force Facebook and Google to pay Australian media for news content published on their platforms was garnering interest from leaders around the world.

“People are looking at what Australia is doing,” he said, noting that he had already discussed the situation with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Canada’s Justin Trudeau.

The legislatio­n, called the News Media and Digital Platforms Mandatory Bargaining Code, was approved this week by the lower house of parliament and will be debated beginning Monday by the Senate, which is expected to adopt the law by the end of the week. Facebook has defended its dramatic response to the law, saying the legislatio­n “fundamenta­lly misunderst­ands” the platform’s relationsh­ip with media organisati­ons and that it had no choice but to bar news content from its services in Australia.

Since the ban came into effect, visits to Australian news sites by users at home and abroad dropped significan­tly, with overseas traffic down by over 20 per cent per day, according to data analytics company Chartbeat.

The data also suggested users were not yet leaving Facebook in response to the ban, with no apparent rise in Google search traffic recorded.

News Corp Australia executive chairman Michael Miller, speaking to a separate Senate inquiry in Canberra, said the full impact of Facebook’s decision was yet to be felt by publishers.

Yesterday saw referral traffic from the platform disappear, he said, while “direct traffic to our websites was up in double digits”.

Miller also encouraged the social media giant to return to direct negotiatio­ns with media outlets.

“The door is still open to Facebook.”

Facebook’s sweeping ban drew widespread criticism for inadverten­tly blocking access to several critical government pages, including emergency services, health department­s and the national weather service – with most restored in the hours after it came into effect.

Despite earlier threats to pull its services from Australia over the legislatio­n, Google softened its stance and instead brokered several deals with large media companies, including Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp.

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